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CAPRAROLA 


FARMHOVSES:AND SMALL 
PROVINCIAL BVILDINGS 
IN SOVTHERN ITALY 


PHOTOGRAPHS BY 
MARIAN-O-HOOKER 
TEXT BY 
KATHARINE HOOKER 

AND : 
MYRON HVNT 


ARCHITECTVRAL BOOK PVBLISHING CO-INC- 
PAVL WENZEL AND MAVRICE KRAKOW- 
3] EAST [2TH STREET NEW YORK 


Copyricut 1925 ‘ 7 


ARCHITECTURAL Book Pustisntne Co., Inc. © WES oo 


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INTRODUCTION 


T WAS perhaps fifteen years ago that Miss Hooker gave the writer a set of contact 
prints from a hundred or more of the photographs which formed the beginnings of 
her collection. Today, that collection has quadrupled. It is the result of many trips, 

each covering many months spent almost entirely in out-of-the-way Italian places. In 
recent years, others have taken to combing the byways of Italy and publishing the results. 
There is not in our office a published collection of photographs of minor Italian work 
which has given more inspiration than the unpublished set from which these selections 


have been made. 


Notwithstanding the amount of Italian material published within the last decade, it 
is a pleasure to find, sprinkled all through Miss Hooker’s dozen albums, bits which no one 
else seems to have found, or if previously found, have seldom been recorded by so skillful 


a photographer. 


The spirit of much of the work here published, when taken from central and northern 
Italy, is universally known. Much of the material from the Apulian district is, however, 
unique, as far as previous publication is concerned. Historical references elsewhere made 
by Miss Hooker’s mother, Mrs. Katharine Hooker, the author of ‘“Wayfarers in Italy” 
and “Byways in Southern Tuscany”, help to tell a part of the story of the architecture 
in this little-known Apulia. The bee-hive towns are so obviously the building of stone 
tents that it doesn’t need her reference to an influx from Northern Africa to make one 
understand their origin. We are all familiar with the continental relics of the more lux- 
urious North African migrants to Spain and Sicily. Here are relics of a simpler people, 
who seem to have brought with them none of the architectural momentum of any of the 
dead eastern empires, but only that of their own tents. 


No architect can really understand or enjoy to the full the local color of an old dis- 
trict, isolated by lack of roads or by the racial persistence of groups, except in the pro- 
portion that he harks back to those waves of migration which everywhere in the world 
have left their imprint upon building, even after all apparent trace of the blood that 
brought the special color seems to have vanished. 


Irom the inspiration furnished by such books as this is developing the minor archi- 
tecture of the United States, and particularly that of the Southwest. It is from the 


vil 


minor buildings in any historic district that a student gets his understanding of the in- 
nate character of its buildings and a true appreciation of its more important works of 
later periods of wealth and grandeur. 


The writer has joined a great pleasure to a feeling of duty in encouraging Miss 
Hooker to place some of her material before students of Italian architecture, men who 
themselves are day by day working out in this country an architectural solution which 
shall fit our method of living, our climatic conditions, and those necessities and opportu- 
nities that go with the results of modern invention. 


Myron Hunt, Vice President, 
January 30, 1925. Allied Architects Association of Los Angeles. 


er IRG Te TE JANG Jeb 


HE northern and central parts of Italy are so well covered by guide books that to 

dwell upon them is unnecessary, but a journey to the south-eastern portion is not 

so easy or so often undertaken, though it affords the traveler an interesting and 
surprising field in which to trace the racial records that survive in its architecture. 


The provinces of Apulia and Basilicata in particular may be said to have a history of 
their own, having been by turn overrun by Greeks, Lombards, Arabs and Normans. Of 
the Greek time when the Greek language was spoken universally in Apulia, there remain 
tombs, coins and pottery. Ruvo, for example, was an ancient Greek colony, and vases in 
great number have been excavated there, some seventeen hundred of which are to be seen 
in the private museum of that place, the collection of Signor Jatta. 


The period of the Roman government in Apulia is commemorated by a few bridges, 
stately portions of aqueducts in the midst of lonely plains, an occasional arch, stones en- 
graved with inscriptions and mosaic pavements preserved in museums, notably that of 
Lucera. 


When the centre of Roman power had passed to Constantinople many churches in the 
Byzantine style were built, almost all of which have disappeared, but the feature of the 
Oriental dome survives in later buildings and good examples can be seen at Giovinazzo, 
Molfetta and Canosa. 


In the ninth century Bari, the largest city of Apulia, was for thirty years the seat of 
a Mohammedan government, under a Sultan, whose rule included also the province of 
Naples. No Saracenic religious buildings remain, for they are systematically destroyed 
and sometimes Christian churches were built on the foundations of Mohammedan tem- 
ples, but the survival of the Arabian influence is found in the humbler forms of domestic 
architecture. The Christian churches which now stand in Apulia were generally founded 
in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and often rebuilt. Fortunately the beautiful fa- 
cades of the good period have nearly all been left undisturbed by the disastrous “restora- 
tions” of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, but most of the interiors are spoiled 


by recent stucco and paint. 


In northern Apulia the territory of the Gargano has interesting examples of Oriental 
dwellings. In Peschici there are one story square buildings with the roof a perfect dome; 


and in their modern structures they still cling to the dome, but much flattened. In both 
Peschici and Rodi there is a picturesque feature in their large pyramidal chimneys. One 
village in the Gargano, Sannicandro, has a unique peculiarity in its water system. At the 
foot of the slope on which its Oriental-looking houses stand, the ground is level, and here 
are scattered apparently at random, some two hundred well-heads. The wells are shal- 
low, and are filled merely by the seepage of rainwater, which is often quite insufficient. 


Further south the highway lies for miles parallel with the Adriatic, while between 
is a broad band of cultivation, sprinkled with rural buildings of saracenic type, resem- 
bling the bee-hive huts of the Asiatic shore. Some are pyramids, slim and steep, some 
are more rounded. They are smoothly finished and whitewashed. Others again take the 
shape of circles of stairs mounting to a peak. This latter form affords the peasant shelves 
on which to dry his figs. Often the two types, dome and flat roof, are combined. Some 
are dwellings and some, storehouses. The neighborhood of Bisceglie and Trani is a good 
one for seeing a variety of them. 


One of the most singular developments of this rural architecture is to be seen at 
Alberobello, a small town a few miles inland, between Bari and Brindisi. The houses 
here have steep, cone-shaped roofs, built of roughly shaped stones laid one upon another 
to the peak, without mortar. This local manner of building dates back to the fifteenth 
century. The earliest form was a simple pyramid. Later the house became rectangular, 
the cone shape being confined to the roof. The walls of these houses are exceedingly thick, 
and the door is always a Roman arch. The house is plastered and whitewashed, but the 
stones of the roof are left to darken with time. If the house has several rooms each has 
its separate cupola. 


The name of trulli has been used for the Alberobello buildings but it is not a local 
term and scholars disagree as to its correctness, some considering it to apply only to cer- 
tain pre-historic remains of which examples are found south of Lecce. 


Along much of the Apulian shore of the Adriatic it 1s interesting to note that the 
system of raising water for irrigation is purely Egyptian. The sakieh in Egypt is called 
the bindolo in southern Italy. A large vertical wheel upon which at regular intervals 
buckets are attached, is geared with a horizontal wheel. The motive power that turns 
the latter is in Egypt a camel or ox; and in Apulia, an ox or donkey. The vertical wheel 
bringing up the water automatically empties the buckets into a trough or reservoir pre- 
pared to receive it and from there it is distributed over the fields. 


KATHARINE HOOKER. 


Index 


Frontispiece—Caprarola, province of Lazio. 


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ABRUZZI 


Montefino, a farm house. 

Montefino, a farm house. 

Penne. 

Chieti, a farm. 

Chieti, a farm; drying tobacco. 

Chieti, a farm. 

Chieti, large farm building, the front. 
Chieti, large farm building, the side. 
Chieti. 

Orronan tac: 

Ortona, farm buildings and chapel. 
Ortona, farm buildings and chapel. 

San Giovanni in Venere. 

Fossacesia, a villa. 

Lanciano, cross with emblems of the Passion. 
Capestrano. 

Capestrano, Monastery of San Giovanni. 
Rocca Pia. 


APU TLTA 


Rodi, a church and dwellings. 
Rodi, a court. 

Rodi, children carrying water. 
Peschici, dwellings. 

Peschici. 

Peschici, the castle. 

Peschici. 

Peschici. 

Peschici. 

Peschici, a cistern and shelter. 

San Nicandro. 

San Nicandro, the town wells. 
San Nicandro. 

San Nicandro. 

San Nicandro. 

San Nicandro. 

San Nicandro. 

Monte Gargano, peasant’s dwelling. 
Monte Sant’ Angelo, dwellings. 
Manfredonia. 

Manfredonia. 

Candelaro, chapel and shelter. 
Foggia, farm in the plains. 
Foggia, farm in the plains. 
Foggia, tufa house and quarry in the plains. 
Biccari. 


. Troia, store house; living room for harvest time. 


Bovino, a dwelling with pigeon towers. 
Bovino. 
Trani, dwelling, pergola, store house. 


Oe Trani: 
ian 


Ostuni. 
Trani, a store house. 


Orv Or Sr Sr Or 
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. Mola di Bari, farm with water wheel and cistern. 
. Polignano. 

. Gioia del Colle, the Castle court: 
. Fasano, a dwelling. 
Peasanontaetat ite 

. Fasano. 

» Hasano: 

. Fasano. 

. Alberobello. 

2. Alberobello. 

3. Alberobello. 

. Alberobello. 

5. Alberobello. 

. Alberobello. 

. Alberobello. 

. Alberobello. 

9. Locorotondo, a farm. 


Alberobello, a farm. 
Alberobello, a pottery shop. 
Alberobello. 

Alberobello. 

Massafra. 


. Oria, town gate. 


Novolit. 
Casamassella. 


BASILICATA 
Tolve. 


9, Pietragalla, huts for animals, storage, and wine making. 
. Rapolla; red peppers drying on houses. 

. Melfi. 

. Melfi. 


CAMPANIA 


. Minori, a street. 

. Minori, a street. 

. Ravello. 

. Ravello, a garden. 
oeala. 

. Positano. 

. Naples. 

. Naples. 

. Naples, a court. 

. Naples, shops. 

3. Naples. 

panes. 

5. Nola, church and dwellings. 
. Nola, a farm. 


LAZIO 


. Alatri, a street. 

PAlatri. 

PeAlatiie 

SAlatnr 

. Alatri. 

2. Anagni. 

. Artena. 

. Artena, the Town Fountain. 
5. Castel Gandolfo. 

. Cori, Porta Nintesina: 

. Ferentino, Porta Sanguinaria. 


. Ferentino, San Lorenzo. 

9. Frosinone. 

). Genazzano. 

. Monte Rotondo, the Town Fountain. 
2. Nemi. 

3. Olevano, dwellings. 

. Olevano. 

5. Olevano, street and shrine. 
5. Olevano. 

’ Olevano. 

8. Palestrina. 

9. Palestrina. 

). Palestrina. 

. Ronciglione. 

2. San Vito, the Castle. 
Sadie \itos 

. Segni. 

5. Subiaco, street and shrine. 
. Zagarolo. 


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2.7 Hooker, Marian Osgoo 
Farmhouses and small provincial building 


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